The music of Gurdjieff - De Hartmann.. T De Hartmann
In Gurdjieffâs view, music like other traditional sciences must above all serve to lead humanity toward awakening. Most of the music we listen to, however, is âsubjective.â Not only does it flow from the composerâs subjective state but it affects each listener according to the subjective state in which he happens to be. Infinitely rarer is âobjectiveâ music which requires an objective knowledge of human nature, most specifically of the function and properties of feeling and how feeling is affected by the specific âqualitiesâ of each vibration. Objective music affects all people in the same way. It not only touches the feelings but transforms them, bringing the listener to a unified or âharmoniousâ state within himself and thus to a new relation with the universe which is itself a field of vibrations. According to Gurdjieff, the seven-note musical scale expresses a fundamental cosmic law, the âLaw of Octavesâ which governs the development of vibrations, the flow of energy, in all phenomena in the universe.
01. Holy Affirming. Holy Denying. Holy Reconciling.mp3
02. The Resurrection of Christ.mp3
03. Prayer and Despair.mp3
04. Sayyid No. 10.mp3
05. Hymm (Jan. 2, 1927).mp3
06. Sacred Reading from the Koran.mp3
07. Sayyid Song.mp3
08. Hymn for Easter Thursday.mp3
09. Hymn to the Endless Creator.mp3
10. Prayer No. 2.mp3
11. Essene Hymn.mp3
12. Hymn from a Great Temple.mp3
13. Rejoice, Beelzebub!.mp3
14. Bayaty.mp3
15. Kurd Melody from Isfahan.mp3
16. Meditation.mp3
17. The Struggle of the Magicians No. 1.mp3
1 - 01. Holy Affirming. Holy Denying. Holy Reconciling
2 - 02. The Resurrection of Christ
3 - 03. Prayer and Despair
5 - 05. Hymm (Jan. 2, 1927)
6 - 06. Sacred Reading from the Koran
8 - 08. Hymn for Easter Thursday
9 - 09. Hymn to the Endless Creator
12 - 12. Hymn from a Great Temple
13 - 13. Rejoice, Beelzebub!
15 - 15. Kurd Melody from Isfahan
17 - 17. The Struggle of the Magicians No. 1